SMSF contributions administration covers the recording, classification, cap monitoring, and regulatory reporting of every dollar going into a self managed super fund. Contributions are governed by caps, timing rules, and eligibility conditions under the SIS Act and the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. Misclassify a contribution, accept one from an ineligible member, or miss a reporting deadline and the member ends up with excess contributions tax, ATO penalties, and a bill they did not expect. SMSFcentral tracks contributions in real time so cap breaches are caught before they happen, not after.
What’s Included
- Recording and classifying all contributions by type: concessional, non-concessional, spouse, downsizer, government co-contribution, small business CGT contributions
- Real-time cap monitoring against current-year thresholds, with alerts before limits are reached
- Carry-forward concessional contribution calculations (tracking unused cap amounts from prior years)
- Non-concessional bring-forward rule tracking, including Total Super Balance (TSB) eligibility checks
- Division 293 tax identification: flagging members whose income and concessional contributions exceed $250,000
- Contribution splitting applications and processing
- Excess contribution reporting and remediation advice
- SuperStream compliance for employer contributions
- Member contribution statements as part of the annual return
- Contribution reserve allocations where the trust deed permits
Our Process
- Contribution received. When a contribution hits the fund’s bank account, we identify the source and type within two business days. Employer contributions received via SuperStream include data that specifies the contribution type. Personal contributions require confirmation from the member or adviser.
- Classification. We classify each contribution against the correct cap category. This step matters because a misclassified contribution (for example, treating a personal concessional contribution as non-concessional) changes the member’s tax position entirely.
- Cap check. We check the contribution against the member’s current-year cap position, including any carry-forward amounts for concessional contributions and bring-forward balance for non-concessional contributions. If the contribution would breach a cap, we contact the adviser immediately.
- Eligibility verification. We verify the member meets the eligibility conditions for the contribution type. For members aged 67–74, we confirm the work test or work test exemption status. We check the member’s TSB for non-concessional contribution eligibility.
- Allocation. The contribution is allocated to the member’s accumulation account. If the fund’s trust deed allows contribution reserves, we can allocate the contribution to the reserve first and then allocate to a member account in the same or following financial year. This is a legitimate strategy for managing cap timing around 30 June.
- Reporting. Contributions are reported in the fund’s annual return. We prepare the member contribution statement that the ATO uses to reconcile against the member’s personal tax return and the employer’s payment summaries.
Contribution Types and Caps (2025–26)
Concessional Contributions (CC)
Concessional contributions include employer contributions (SG and salary sacrifice), personal deductible contributions and contributions allocated from a contribution reserve.
Cap: $30,000 per member per financial year.
Members with a Total Super Balance below $500,000 at the previous 30 June can access unused concessional cap amounts from up to five prior financial years. This carry-forward rule (introduced 1 July 2018) allows catch-up contributions well above the standard $30,000 cap.
Example: A member with a TSB of $400,000 who contributed only $15,000 in concessional contributions last year has $15,000 of unused cap to carry forward. In 2025–26, they can contribute up to $45,000 in concessional contributions without exceeding the cap.
Non-Concessional Contributions (NCC)
Non-concessional contributions are made from after-tax money and include personal contributions for which no tax deduction is claimed.
Cap: $120,000 per member per financial year.
Members under 75 with a TSB below certain thresholds can trigger the bring-forward rule:
| TSB at previous 30 June | Bring-forward available | Maximum NCC over 3 years |
|---|---|---|
| Below $1.66 million | 3-year bring-forward | $360,000 |
| $1.66m – $1.78m | 2-year bring-forward | $240,000 |
| $1.78m – $1.9m | 1 year only | $120,000 |
| $1.9 million or above | Nil | $0 |
Other Contribution Types
Downsizer contributions: Members aged 55 or over can contribute up to $300,000 from the sale of their main residence. Not subject to contribution caps, age limits or TSB restrictions.
Small business CGT contributions: Up to the lifetime CGT cap ($1.780 million for 2025–26). Subject to specific conditions under Subdivision 292-C ITAA 1997.
Spouse contributions: A contribution made by one spouse to the other’s super account. The contributing spouse may claim a tax offset of up to $540 if the receiving spouse’s income is below $40,000.
Government co-contribution: For members with income below $60,400 (2025–26), the government contributes $0.50 for every $1 of personal non-concessional contributions, up to a maximum government contribution of $500.
Regulatory Context
SIS Act s62, sole purpose test. All contributions must be consistent with the fund’s sole purpose of providing retirement benefits to members (or their dependants on death). Contributions that are part of a scheme to access super early or provide a current-day benefit breach this test.
Contribution caps (Schedule 1 ITAR). The concessional and non-concessional caps are indexed under the Income Tax Assessment Regulations and published by the ATO each financial year. The caps apply per member, not per fund. A member with accounts in multiple funds must aggregate contributions across all funds.
Division 293 tax. Members with income (including concessional contributions) exceeding $250,000 pay an additional 15% tax on the lesser of their concessional contributions or the amount by which their income exceeds $250,000. This brings the effective tax rate on concessional contributions to 30% for high-income members. The ATO issues Division 293 assessments directly to the member, who can elect to have the tax paid from their super account.
Excess concessional contributions. Excess CC are included in the member’s assessable income and taxed at their marginal rate. The member receives a 15% tax offset to account for the contributions tax already paid by the fund. The member can elect to release up to 85% of the excess from their super fund.
Excess non-concessional contributions. Excess NCC attract a tax on the associated earnings at the member’s marginal rate. The member must withdraw the excess amount plus associated earnings from their super fund. If they do not, the excess is taxed at the top marginal rate (45% plus Medicare levy).
Common Pitfalls
The carry-forward rule requires a five-year lookback. If a member has switched administrators or has multiple funds, the historical data is often incomplete. Contributing under carry-forward without confirming actual unused cap amounts from prior years is a fast track to an excess contributions assessment.
Members 75 and over can only receive mandated employer contributions (SG). Accept a voluntary contribution for someone ineligible and you have a compliance breach. The money must be returned within 30 days.
A common error: treating an employer contribution as a personal contribution (or vice versa). This changes which cap the contribution counts against and may invalidate a tax deduction. SuperStream data from employers should resolve this for employer contributions, but personal contributions need clear documentation.
Members who want to claim a personal tax deduction for contributions must give the fund a valid notice of intent to claim under s290-170 of the ITAA 1997 before lodging their tax return or before the end of the following financial year, whichever comes first. If the notice is not provided in time, the contribution is non-concessional. We track these notices and remind advisers when they are outstanding.
Frequently Asked Questions
The excess is included in the member’s personal assessable income and taxed at their marginal rate, with a 15% offset for tax already paid by the fund. The ATO issues an excess contributions determination. The member can elect to release up to 85% of the excess from their super fund to pay the tax.
They can still make concessional contributions up to the $30,000 cap. Non-concessional contributions are not permitted when TSB reaches $1.9 million. Downsizer contributions remain available regardless of TSB.
Unused cap amounts are tracked from 1 July 2018. The first year members could use carry-forward amounts was 2019–20. The look-back period is five years, so for 2025–26 the earliest accessible unused cap year is 2020–21.
Up to 85% of concessional contributions made in a financial year can be split to a spouse’s super account, provided the spouse is under 65 (or aged 65–74 and meets the work test). This is a contribution splitting application, not a rollover. The trust deed must permit it.
Yes. All employer contributions to SMSFs must be made via the SuperStream electronic system. We provide the fund’s electronic service address and ensure employer contributions are received and processed through the correct channel.
Bank statement showing the deposit, identification of the contributor, the contribution type and any supporting documents (s290-170 notice, downsizer form, employer contribution data via SuperStream). We maintain all records for the required retention period.
Related Solutions
- SMSF Pension Setup and Management: pension commencement, minimum drawdowns and TBAR reporting
- SMSF Trust Deed Updates: ensure your deed permits contribution reserves and splitting
- SMSF Wind-Up: final contribution reconciliation and member rollover processing
Caps Monitored as Contributions Arrive
Call 02 8412 0086 or email [email protected]. We track contributions in real time, not at year-end when it is too late to fix anything.
Provision of Superstream details for employer contributions and provision of assistance to the employer to ensure contributions are being made correctly.
Close monitoring of contribution caps.
Reconciliation of all contributions.
Contribution minutes for audit.